Last nite Rios weighed in at 173 lbs. Same day weigh ins were abandoned to protect fighters (and the promoters purse) but now it sems a fighter could be facing an opponent who is 2 weight classes above him. Same day weigh ins would make fighters compete in their natural weight class. This might make things more fair and even protect fighters.
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I'm very much in favor of it.
If you can't get in shape, you shouldn't be in the ring anyway.
And like many others who tried to use extra weight to their advantage, Rios paid for it big time.
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Originally posted by ruedboy View PostLast nite Rios weighed in at 173 lbs. Same day weigh ins were abandoned to protect fighters (and the promoters purse) but now it sems a fighter could be facing an opponent who is 2 weight classes above him. Same day weigh ins would make fighters compete in their natural weight class. This might make things more fair and even protect fighters.
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I have been a big boxing fan for a long time including decades of same day weigh ins. I really can't remember any problems with them. The system worked just fine. There may have been some problems but I don't remember any. I think changing to weighing in in the early afternoon the day before the fight was a terrible idea and didn't protect the boxers at all. It encourages extreme ways to compete in a weight class much smaller than the boxer should be fighting in. Rios is a good example. He weighs in at 147 and enters the ring as a 173 pound light heavyweight. He didn't benefit from the extreme weight gain and he fought a sluggish, terrible fight. It still isn't fair for him to outweigh Bradley by 15 pounds. That would have been impossible in the same day weigh in days. Boxers never gained more than 5 or 6 pounds between the weigh in and the fight. Not all rule changes are good for boxing. Not allowing judges to score an even round even was also a bad change and partly responsible for so many lousy scorecards turned in by the judges. The judges tend to give all the rounds they would have scored even to their favorite fighter. Judges have their favorite boxers just like all boxing fans. Now you often get one judge scoring a lopsided score for one boxer and another judge scoring a lopsided win for the other boxer. It could be that all the rounds they would have scored even are given to the boxer they like best. Scoring an even round even is a tool judges should be allowed to use. Rios may not be the best example of why I think we should return to same day weigh ins. Rios is a fatso and could fight at 135 or 140 with a better diet and harder training. Chavez might be a better example. He consistently came into the ring at 180 pounds for his middleweight fights and had a big size and weight advantage over other middleweights.
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Originally posted by boliodogs View PostI have been a big boxing fan for a long time including decades of same day weigh ins. I really can't remember any problems with them. The system worked just fine. There may have been some problems but I don't remember any. I think changing to weighing in in the early afternoon the day before the fight was a terrible idea and didn't protect the boxers at all. It encourages extreme ways to compete in a weight class much smaller than the boxer should be fighting in. Rios is a good example. He weighs in at 147 and enters the ring as a 173 pound light heavyweight. He didn't benefit from the extreme weight gain and he fought a sluggish, terrible fight. It still isn't fair for him to outweigh Bradley by 15 pounds. That would have been impossible in the same day weigh in days. Boxers never gained more than 5 or 6 pounds between the weigh in and the fight. Not all rule changes are good for boxing. Not allowing judges to score an even round even was also a bad change and partly responsible for so many lousy scorecards turned in by the judges. The judges tend to give all the rounds they would have scored even to their favorite fighter. Judges have their favorite boxers just like all boxing fans. Now you often get one judge scoring a lopsided score for one boxer and another judge scoring a lopsided win for the other boxer. It could be that all the rounds they would have scored even are given to the boxer they like best. Scoring an even round even is a tool judges should be allowed to use. Rios may not be the best example of why I think we should return to same day weigh ins. Rios is a fatso and could fight at 135 or 140 with a better diet and harder training. Chavez might be a better example. He consistently came into the ring at 180 pounds for his middleweight fights and had a big size and weight advantage over other middleweights.
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That's how it should be. A lot of weight cheaters around.
It's not only the weight that hurt Rios, it is because he isn't that good. A good or great boxer weighing that much over his opponent can be a huge danger to the smaller man.
Let's implement it!
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